View Full Version : They Sat in the Plane at the Gate for Seven Hours...
To sum it up:
47 passengers boarded a Continental Express at 9:23 p.m. last night. They were going from Houston to Minneapolis.This was not a large plane but a small jet. If you've flown this kind of plane, you know you can stand up but just barely. The configuration is 2x2. No food besides pretzels (or something like that).
Thunderstorms diverted the flight to Rochester, Minnesota. This is where you go for the Mayo Clinic. It is only approx. 50 miles from Minneapolis.
The passengers were not allowed to leave the plane for seven hours.
They went to the terminal for 2 1/2 hours, then got back on the same plane for the final 50 miles.
Nightmare flight story here SFW (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_nightmare_flight).
Why didn't they just bus these people to Minneapolis????
Why didn't someone whip out a cell phone and dial the local media???
Those poor people... My worst experience like this was at Dublin Airport. A good 45 minutes, no air circulation because whatever circulates the air was broken (or so claimed the pilot), broiling hot. Reason: some other jet was blocking ours from taking off. What's your worst?
I can understand systemically how this happens (and much of it is the result of the tight security requirements around an airport).
But I am of the opinion that every airport should be required to build, out near some secondary runway a functional building containing comfortable seating, TVs, minimal food, and restrooms where the occupants of a plane can be offloaded, wait, and reboard when needed without breaching security concerns or requiring use of already booked gates.
Andrew
08-12-2009, 01:39 PM
Why didn't someone whip out a cell phone and dial the local media???
That was my thought. "911? Help, I'm being held against my will on a plane!"
Melonballer
08-12-2009, 01:49 PM
The fact this keeps happening is ridiculous. They have gone back to the gate for less. I am surprised that passengers in one of these situtations have not rioted yet.
innerSpaceman
08-12-2009, 01:52 PM
When I heard this story yesterday, I was wondering what kind of airport doesn't have a place on the airplane side of security barriers inside the terminal?
Was this like the last airport in the U.S. where you board from a rolling staircase on the tarmac? Even in those, you have to exit to the tarmac from somewhere. WTF?
* * * * *
My worst was being kept on a plane on the ground in Denver after an "emergency" landing, with no air for 2 hours, and my girlfriend going crazy and getting loud because they wouldn't let her off the plane to smoke a cigarette.
Fortunately, this was pre-9/11 ... or we would have been arrested for the slight disturbance she made.
Was this like the last airport in the U.S. where you board from a rolling staircase on the tarmac? Even in those, you have to exit to the tarmac from somewhere. WTF?
Well, it's dinky but called Rochester International, meaning they handle whoever's private plane from wherever, as well as the organs being flown in from wherever.
When I heard this story yesterday, I was wondering what kind of airport doesn't have a place on the airplane side of security barriers inside the terminal?
With large airports the problem frequently isn't with having a secure place inside the terminal for them but getting a gate to which the airplane can return and then sit without just passing the problem on to another airplane. Big airports are good at keeping gates at or near capacity during the day.
Plus, in situations where boarding passes are consumed it is difficult to reboard the plane with proper accounting and security.
None of these things are really justifications, just contribute to my understanding how it comes to happen.
Was this like the last airport in the U.S. where you board from a rolling staircase on the tarmac? Even in those, you have to exit to the tarmac from somewhere. WTF?If it is a small airport then the security check may very well be at the door to the tarmac meaning that to reboard everybody has to go through it again. If you're in a situation where you're being told every 15 minutes that you'll be cleared to go in just 10 more minutes it becomes psychologically difficult (tests show this is a cost/benefit calculation that people find it very difficult to make rationally) to decide to accept the 90 minute minimum delay in the face of the 15 minute promised delay. And after an hour it gets hard, not easier since you start thinking "well, it's already been an hour so we must be getting close right?" A bit of a gambler's fallacy; that is, the belief that previous outcomes inordinately influence future outcomes such as the idea that since the last five coin tosses were heads (or the last ten 10-minute promises were false) the odds are increased that the next coin toss will be heads (the next 10-minute promise will be true).
Like I said, not justifications for it happening. In fact, the easily understood causes and statistical predictability should make it easy to come up with general policies that will minimize the pain.
Fortunately I've never really had a bad tarmac experience. 20 minutes or so once. But it was very hot out (Orlando or Houston, I think) and even in that time without air it was getting uncomfortably warm.
Snowflake
08-12-2009, 03:02 PM
I've been lucky but my worst was LAX, called United and checked the flight status before leaving hotel and heading to drop off rental car and head to ticketing/check in for the red-eye. Get to the check in, flight is NOT on the board. Get to the person behind the counter and am told, your flight was cancelled due to weather (um no weather is not an issue) so we can't book you until tomorrow morning and we can't comp you a hotel or anything. Uh, not on your life, I make a stink and get a voucher for a hotel (in BURBANK) and a transport. Go to the shuttle stop and wait, and wait and wait. No shuttle and the United staff are running from angry passengers, shuttle finally arrives, by now, 1:30, we board the bus, and then we get stuck in traffic, for 2 hours. Get to the hotel, call, no flights from Burbank or anywhere else (it's mid-August) and basically shower, email friends East not to pick me up and put on my old clothes since my checkable luggage is where? LAX. Back on the bus to LAX at 5 for a 8:30 flight on American, we get there in 20 minutes, no sleep I'm cranky and drinking ventis from Starbucks to stay awake. American treated us like royalty and the flight home was great. Never flown United since.
Second United was a flight from SF to DC, sat on the tarmac for 3 hours due to a faulty loo on the flight. Can't take off til fixed, can't fix for some reason. Finally get going, flight attendant insists all is well and our connecting flights in Atlanta will be waiting. I know, dream on. We offload in Atlanta and I gotta give Delta snaps, they had dozens of staff people lined up late at night, vouchers/buses and comps for hotel/shuttle and food for our missed flights. Next morning, more comp food, and a nice flight to DC.
Ghoulish Delight
08-12-2009, 03:37 PM
Fortunately I've never really had a bad tarmac experience. 20 minutes or so once. But it was very hot out (Orlando or Houston, I think) and even in that time without air it was getting uncomfortably warm.I'm far more frightened of being stuck on the ground with no AC on a hot day for an extended period than I am of actually flying.
alphabassettgrrl
08-12-2009, 04:54 PM
I'm with you, GD.
innerSpaceman
08-12-2009, 05:20 PM
I don't know if this is true, but when I first (over)heard the story yesterday, it was stated that the airline offered the passengers a free ...
and I was expecting to hear the word "flight," but was aghast when instead I heard the word "beverage."
If true ... WTF???
BarTopDancer
08-12-2009, 06:10 PM
The airport manager said that there was no reason they shouldn't have been allowed back in the terminal. At the time, the reason they weren't allowed back in the terminal was due to insufficient staff since nearly everyone had left for the night.
Cadaverous Pallor
08-12-2009, 08:39 PM
If I were on the plane, after 4 hours I would have called the media, no f'n around.
Sometimes, you just have to wonder at human beings ...
Despite anger and frustration, the passengers stuck overnight Friday aboard a packed 50-seat jet on the tarmac at the Rochester, Minn., airport didn't revolt. They didn't even ask to get off the plane.
"Everybody was tired and wiped out, and nobody spoke up," says Link Christin, a passenger who says he felt "imprisoned" for 5½ hours on Continental Express Flight 2816. "I wish I would have been cogent enough to go to a flight attendant and say we need to go into the terminal for chairs, light, food and drink."
Source is here (http://www.usatoday.com/travel/flights/2009-08-12-stranded-fliers-on-the-tarmac_N.htm). There's a short sidebar video at the link from another flight that sat on the tarmac with no air. Infants, old people, hours, summer heat, no air. Can't wait to see it, right?
Stan4dSteph
08-13-2009, 06:59 AM
I've been on Continental Express planes (that are operated by Express Jet). They are very small. I would have been tweeting like crazy. And calling the local news. And CNN.
Cadaverous Pallor
08-13-2009, 08:38 AM
Sometimes, you just have to wonder at human beings ...
Source is here (http://www.usatoday.com/travel/flights/2009-08-12-stranded-fliers-on-the-tarmac_N.htm). There's a short sidebar video at the link from another flight that sat on the tarmac with no air. Infants, old people, hours, summer heat, no air. Can't wait to see it, right?I just read the whole article and I think it's worth everyone's time. Passengers currently have no rights to ask for anything - food, air, clean toilets even. As soon as you are on the plane you are at the whim of the pilot and the company. Rabble rousing can land you in big trouble.
Looks like this latest story is giving the Passenger Bill of Rights some traction in Congress. Boxer is interested. (http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock%20News/2476475/) There are a ton of other news sites covering the story.
Chernabog
08-13-2009, 09:18 AM
and I was expecting to hear the word "flight," but was aghast when instead I heard the word "beverage."
If true ... WTF???
Well, if it works for Obama.... :evil:
Passengers currently have no rights to ask for anything - food, air, clean toilets even.
It's like we're cargo.
This story is really under my skin. The latest:
Furthermore, the airline apologized to the passengers on the flight and offered them a full refund for their entire trip and a certificate good for future travel.
Source (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32391447/ns/travel-news/). Bolding is mine. Like any of those passengers is ever going to set foot on a Continental flight again. Watch for a flurry of Continental vouchers on ebay, I guess.
And, in case your appetite for airplane travel has been whetted, Jet Blue will sell you an all-you-can-fly pass good between Sept. 8 and Oct. 8, $599 (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32390220/ns/travel-deals/).
innerSpaceman
08-13-2009, 10:58 AM
Well, it's what I would have expected. Better than a beverage.
Were you expecting them to offer the passengers a profit of $500 each? I don't think anything other than comping the distastrous flight they were on and offering some of the company's own services would be possible.
Sheesh.
Were you expecting them to offer the passengers a profit of $500 each? I don't think anything other than comping the distastrous flight they were on and offering some of the company's own services would be possible.
I hadn't considered profit. That's kind of working for me, especially given that the one toilet on the plane didn't flush.
I have a good friend who was a navigator, co-pilot and now is a pilot with another major airline. He always calls Continental "Scumbag Airlines". That's from an employee's viewpoint. As a passenger who flies regularly on regional puddlejumpers into Minneapolis and Chicago to connect with the big jets, I don't think Continental Express is probably any worse than any of its competitors, such as United Express.
LSPoorEeyorick
08-13-2009, 01:55 PM
Heh, perspective.
Reading that story, two words come to mind. BLOOD. and CLOTS.
mousepod
08-13-2009, 02:03 PM
Heh, perspective.
Reading that story, two words come to mind. BLOOD. and CLOTS.
Sure. Like you would know.
vBulletin® v3.6.4, Copyright ©2000-2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.